Is VW's €30bn electric dream to become reality?

German car giant starts taking deposits on new range of battery-powered vehicle aiming to knock Tesla off the top in sales

A Volkswagen ID 3 electric car is seen in a glass cage during a press conference in Berlin on May 8, 2019. Volkswagen launched pre-orders via a microsite at a press conference in the German capital today for the ID.3 1st Plus - a high-spec, launch edition version of the Volkswagen brand's first ID. model. The first deliveries of the vehicle on the MEB all-electric platform are scheduled in the sumer of 2020.  / AFP / Odd ANDERSEN
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Volkswagen is about to find out whether consumers will back its €30 billion ($34 billion) strategy to topple Tesla as the electric-car leader.

The German auto giant is now taking €1,000 deposits to secure one of the first in a new range of battery-powered models. The new ID.3 hatchback - which VW hopes will be the electric-car successor to the iconic Beetle - will start at less than €30,000, about the same level as the diesel variant of its best-selling Golf hatchback.

“We are not playing,” VW sales chief Juergen Stackmann said at an event in Berlin launching the reservation programme. “This is the car to beat for the future, for all our competitors.”

Juergen Stackmann, member of the Board of Management, Volkswagen Passenger and Cars brand presents the pre-order scheme of the Volkswagen ID 3 electric car during a press conference in Berlin on May 8, 2019. Volkswagen launched pre-orders via a microsite at a press conference in the German capital today for the ID.3 1st Plus - a high-spec, launch edition version of the Volkswagen brand's first ID. model. The first deliveries of the vehicle on the MEB all-electric platform are scheduled in the sumer of 2020.  / AFP / Odd ANDERSEN
Juergen Stackmann. AFP

The ID.3 anchors the roll-out of more than 20 battery-powered models in coming years with a goal to selling more than 1 million electric cars annually by 2025. The ambitious effort is set to stoke competition in a segment where car makers struggle to generate returns and is mainly driven by tighter pollution regulations. Mr Stackmann said that its electric cars “must make money”.

While some consumers have shown interest in the vehicles - which generally cost more but have less range than combustion models - electric cars haven’t broken through on the mass market.

To drum up interest, VW is offering a special edition of the ID.3 that’s limited to 30,000 vehicles and includes a year’s free charging at stations connected to the company’s WeCharge app. Reservations are open for consumers in 29 countries across Europe, with Germany, Norway and the Netherlands expected to be among the top markets, according to VW. Mr Stackmann expects the reservation book to be filled before the company officially unveils the car in September.

The limited-run variant will cost less than €40,000 and includes a battery capable of powering the car for 420km. The basic version has a range of 330km, while the top-of-the-line model can drive as far as 550km on a charge.

In a sign of its growing marketing rivalry, Tesla sent an email to prospective German customers on Wednesday, trumpeting its Model S and Model X as having the best range of electric cars in series production. Volkswagen is slated to start mass assembly of the ID.3 late this year, with the first deliveries in mid-2020. Overall, VW is aiming to sell 100,000 ID.3 vehicles annually.

Tesla raised $2.35 billion last week to pad its coffers amid struggles to generate profits sustainably. The California-based car maker’s push into Europe and China puts it in direct competition with VW and its upscale sister brands Audi and Porsche, which are also ramping up electric-car plans.

“Volkswagen is a big player, and when we go, a lot of people follow,” said Mr Stackmann.